[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.247-1]

[Page 412-416]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.247-1  Deduction for dividends paid on preferred stock of 
public utilities.

    (a) Amount of deduction. (1) A deduction is provided in section 247 
for dividends paid during the taxable year by certain public utility 
corporations (see paragraph (b) of this section) on certain preferred 
stock (see paragraph (c) of this section). This deduction is an amount 
equal to the product of a specified fraction times the lesser of (i) the 
amount of the dividends paid during the taxable year by a public utility 
on its preferred stock (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section), or 
(ii) the taxable income of the public utility for such taxable year 
(computed without regard to the deduction allowed by section 247). The 
specified fraction for any taxable year is the fraction the numerator of 
which is 14 and the denominator of which is the sum of the corporation 
normal tax rate and the surtax rate for such taxable year specified in 
section 11. Since section 11 provides that for the calendar year 1954 
the corporation normal tax rate is 30 percent and the surtax rate is 22 
percent, the sum of the two tax rates is 52 percent and the specified 
fraction for the calendar year 1954 is 14/52. If, for example, section 
11 should specify that the corporation's normal tax rate is 25 percent 
and the surtax rate is 22 percent for the calendar year, the sum of the 
two tax rates will be 47 percent and the specified fraction for the 
calendar year will be 14/47. If Corporation A, a public utility which 
files its income tax return on the calendar year basis, pays $100,000 
dividends on its preferred stock in the

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calendar year 1954 and if its taxable income for such year is greater 
than $100,000 the deduction allowable to Corporation A under section 247 
for 1954 is $100,000 times 14/52, or $26,923.08. If in 1954 Corporation 
A's taxable income, computed without regard to the deduction provided in 
section 247, had been $90,000 (that is, less than the amount of the 
dividends which it paid on its preferred stock in that year), the 
deduction allowable under section 247 for 1954 would have been $90,000 
times 14/52, or $24,230.77.
    (2) For the purpose of determining the amount of the deduction 
provided in section 247(a) and in subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, 
the amount of dividends paid in a given taxable year shall not include 
any amount distributed in such year with respect to dividends unpaid and 
accumulated in any taxable year ending before October 1, 1942. If any 
distribution is made in the current taxable year with respect to 
dividends unpaid and accumulated for a prior taxable year, such 
distribution will be deemed to have been made with respect to the 
earliest year or years for which there are dividends unpaid and 
accumulated. Thus, if a public utility makes a distribution with respect 
to a prior taxable year, it shall be considered that such distribution 
was made with respect to the earliest year or years for which there are 
dividends unpaid and accumulated, whether or not the public utility 
states that the distribution was made with respect to such year or years 
and even though the public utility stated that the distribution was made 
with respect to a later year. Even though it has dividends unpaid and 
accumulated with respect to a taxable year ending before October 1, 
1942, a public utility may, however, include the dividends paid with 
respect to the current taxable year in computing the deduction under 
section 247. If there are no dividends unpaid and accumulated with 
respect to a taxable year ending before October 1, 1942, a public 
utility may include the dividends paid with respect to a prior taxable 
year which ended after October 1, 1942, in computing the deduction under 
section 247; such public utility in addition may include the dividends 
paid with respect to the current taxable year in computing the deduction 
under section 247. However, if local law or its own charter requires a 
public utility to pay all unpaid and accumulated dividends before any 
dividends can be paid with respect to the current taxable year, such 
public utility may not include any distribution in the current year in 
computing the deduction under section 247 to the extent that there are 
dividends unpaid and accumulated with respect to taxable years ending 
before October 1, 1942.
    (3) If a corporation which is engaged in one or more of the four 
types of business activities (called utility activities in this section) 
enumerated in section 247(b)(1) (the furnishing of telephone service or 
the sale of electrical energy, gas, or water) is also engaged in some 
other business that does not fall within any of the enumerated 
categories, the deduction under section 247 is allowable only for such 
portion of the amount computed under section 247(a) as is allocable to 
the income from utility activities. For this purpose, the allocation may 
be made on the basis of the ratio which the total income from the 
utility activities bears to total income from all sources (total income 
being considered either gross income or gross receipts, whichever method 
results in the higher deduction). However, if such an allocation reaches 
an inequitable result and the books of the corporation are so kept that 
the taxable income attributable to the utility activities can be readily 
determined, particularly where the books of the corporation are required 
by governmental bodies to be so kept for rate making or other purposes, 
the allocation may be made upon the basis of taxable income. No such 
apportionment will be required if the income from sources other than 
utility activities is less than 20 percent of the total income of the 
corporation, irrespective of the method used in determining such total 
income.
    (b) Public utility. As used in section 247 and this section, public 
utility means a corporation engaged in the furnishing of telephone 
service, or in the sale of electric energy, gas, or water if the rates 
charged by such corporation for such furnishing or sale, as the case may 
be, have been established

[[Page 414]]

or approved by a State or political subdivision thereof or by an agency 
or instrumentality of the United States or by a public utility or public 
service commission or other similar body of the District of Columbia or 
of any State or political subdivision thereof. If a schedule of rates 
has been filed with any of the above bodies having the power to 
disapprove such rates, then such rates shall be considered as 
established or approved rates even though such body has taken no action 
on the filed schedule. Rates fixed by contract between the corporation 
and the purchaser, except where the purchaser is the United States, a 
State, the District of Columbia, or an agency or political subdivision 
of the United States, a State, or the District of Columbia, shall not be 
considered as established or approved rates in those cases where they 
are not subject to direct control, or where no maximum rate for such 
contract rates has been established by the United States, a State, the 
District of Columbia, or by an agency or political subdivision thereof. 
The deduction provided in section 247 will not be denied solely because 
part of the gross income of the corporation consists of revenue derived 
from such furnishing or sale at rates which are not so regulated, 
provided the corporation establishes to the satisfaction of the 
Commissioner (1) that the revenue from regulated rates and the revenue 
from unregulated rates are derived from the operation of a single 
interconnected and coordinated system within a single area or region in 
one or more States, or from the operation of more than one such system 
and (2) that the regulation to which it is subject in part of its 
operating territory in one such system is effective to control rates 
within the unregulated territory of the same system so that the rates 
within the unregulated territory have been and are substantially as 
favorable to users and consumers as are the rates within the regulated 
territory.
    (c) Preferred stock. (1) For the purposes of section 247 and this 
section, preferred stock means stock (i) which was issued before October 
1, 1942, (ii) the dividends in respect of which (during the whole of the 
taxable year, or the part of the taxable year after the actual date of 
the issue of such stock) were cumulative, nonparticipating as to current 
distributions, and payable in preference to the payment of dividends on 
other stock, and (iii) the rate of return on which is fixed and cannot 
be changed by a vote of the board of directors or by some similar 
method. However, if there are several classes of preferred stock, all of 
which meet the above requirements, the deduction provided in section 247 
shall not be denied in the case of a given class of preferred stock 
merely because there is another class of preferred stock whose dividends 
are to be paid before those of the given class of stock. Likewise, it is 
immaterial for the purposes of section 247 and this section whether the 
stock be voting or nonvoting stock.
    (2) Preferred stock issued on or after October 1, 1942, under 
certain circumstances will be considered as having been issued before 
October 1, 1942, for purposes of the deduction provided in section 247. 
If the new stock is issued on or after October 1, 1942, to refund or 
replace bonds or debentures which were issued before October 1, 1942, or 
to refund or replace other stock which was preferred stock within the 
meaning of section 247(b)(2) (or the corresponding provision of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1939), such new stock shall be considered as 
having been issued before October 1, 1942. If preferred stock is issued 
to refund or replace stock which was preferred stock within the meaning 
of section 247(b)(2) (or the corresponding provision of the Internal 
Revenue Code of 1939), it shall be immaterial whether the preferred 
stock so refunded or replaced was issued before, on, or after October 1, 
1942. If stock issued on or after October 1, 1942, to refund or replace 
stock which was issued before October 1, 1942, and which was preferred 
stock within the meaning of section 247(b)(2) (or the corresponding 
provision of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939), is not itself preferred 
stock within the meaning of section 247(b)(2) (or the corresponding 
provision of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939), no stock issued to 
refund or replace such stock can be considered preferred stock for 
purposes of the deduction provided in section 247.

[[Page 415]]

    (3) In the case of any preferred stock issued on or after October 1, 
1942, to refund or replace bonds or debentures issued before October 1, 
1942, or to refund or replace other stock which was preferred stock 
within the meaning of section 247(b)(2) (or the corresponding provision 
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939), only that portion of the stock 
issued on or after October 1, 1942, will be considered as having been 
issued before October 1, 1942, the par or stated value of which does not 
exceed the par, stated, or face value of such bonds, debentures, or 
other preferred stock which the new stock was issued to refund or 
replace. In such case no shares of the new stock issued on or after 
October 1, 1942, shall be earmarked in determining the deduction 
allowable under section 247, but the appropriate allocable portion of 
the total amount of dividends paid on such stock will be considered as 
having been paid on stock which was issued before October 1, 1942.
    (4) The provisions of section 247(b)(2) may be illustrated by the 
following example:

    Example. A public utility has outstanding 1,000 bonds which were 
issued before October 1, 1942, and each of which has a face value of 
$100. On or after October 1, 1942, each of such bonds is retired in 
exchange for 1 1/10 shares of preferred stock issued on or after October 
1, 1942, and having a par value of $100 per share. Only 10/11 of the 
dividends paid on the preferred stock thus issued in exchange for the 
bonds will be considered as having been paid on stock which was issued 
before October 1, 1942. Likewise, if preferred stock which is issued on 
or after October 1, 1942, has no par value but a stated value of $50 per 
share and such stock is issued in a ratio of three shares to one share 
to refund or replace preferred stock having a par value of $100 per 
share, only two-thirds of the dividends paid on the new shares of stock 
will be considered as having been paid on stock which was issued before 
October 1, 1942.

    (5) Whether or not preferred stock issued on or after October 1, 
1942, was issued to refund or replace bonds or debentures issued before 
October 1, 1942, or to refund or replace other preferred stock, is in 
each case a question of fact. Among the factors to be considered is 
whether such stock is new in an economic sense to the corporation or 
whether it was issued merely to take the place, directly or indirectly, 
of bonds, debentures, or other preferred stock of such corporation. It 
is not necessary that the new preferred stock be issued in exchange for 
such bonds, debentures, or other preferred stock. The mere fact that the 
bonds, debentures, or other preferred stock remain in existence for a 
short period of time after the issuance of the new stock (or were 
retired before the issuance of the new stock) does not necessarily mean 
that such new stock was not issued to refund or replace such bonds, 
debentures, or other preferred stock. It is necessary to consider the 
entire transaction, including the issuance of the new preferred stock, 
the date of such issuance, the retirement of the old bonds, debentures, 
or preferred stock, and the date of such retirement, in order to 
determine whether such new stock really was issued to take the place of 
bonds, debentures, or other preferred stock of the corporation or 
whether it represents something essentially new in an economic sense in 
the corporation's financial structure. If, for example, a public 
utility, which has outstanding bonds issued before October 1, 1942, 
issues new preferred stock on October 1, 1954, in order to secure funds 
with which to retire such bonds and with the money paid in for such 
stock retires the bonds on November 1, 1954, such stock may be 
considered as having been issued to refund or replace bonds issued 
before October 1, 1942. Whether the money used to retire the bonds can 
be traced back and identified as the money paid in for the stock will 
have evidentiary value, but will not be conclusive, in determining 
whether the stock was issued to refund or replace the bonds. Similarly, 
whether the amount of money used to retire the bonds was smaller than, 
equal to, or greater than that paid in for the stock, or whether the 
entire issue of bonds is retired, will be important, but not decisive, 
in making such determination.
    (6) Preferred stock issued on or after October 1, 1942, by a 
corporation to refund or replace bonds or debentures of a second 
corporation which were issued before October 1, 1942, or to refund or 
replace other preferred stock of such second corporation, may be 
considered as having been issued before October 1, 1942, if such new 
stock was issued (i) in

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a transaction which is a reorganization within the meaning of section 
368(a) or the corresponding provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 
1939; or (ii) in a transaction to which section 371 (relating to 
insolvency reorganizations), or the corresponding provisions of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1939, is applicable; or (iii) in a transaction 
which is subject to the provisions of Part VI, Subchapter O, Chapter 1 
of the Code (relating to exchanges and distributions in obedience to 
orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission) or to the 
corresponding provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. Whether 
the stock actually was issued to refund or replace bonds or debentures 
of the second corporation issued before October 1, 1942, or to refund or 
replace preferred stock of such second corporation, shall be determined 
under the same principles as if only one corporation were involved. A 
corporation may issue stock to refund or replace its own bonds, 
debentures, or other preferred stock in a transaction which is a 
reorganization within the meaning of section 368(a) or the corresponding 
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, in a transaction to 
which section 371 or the corresponding provisions of the Internal 
Revenue Code of 1939 is applicable, or in a transaction which is subject 
to the provisions of Part VI, Subchapter O, Chapter 1 of the Code, or to 
the corresponding provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. The 
provisions of this paragraph, in addition, are applicable in case a 
corporation issues stock on or after October 1, 1942, to refund or 
replace its own bonds, debentures, or other preferred stock even though 
the issuance of such stock may not fall within one of the categories 
enumerated above.
    (7) Even though stock issued on or after October 1, 1942, is 
considered as having been issued before October 1, 1942, by reason of 
having been issued to refund or replace bonds or debentures issued 
before October 1, 1942, or to refund or replace other preferred stock, 
such stock will not be deemed to be preferred stock within the meaning 
of section 247(b)(2), and no deduction will be allowable in respect of 
dividends paid on such stock, unless the stock fulfills all the other 
requirements of a preferred stock set forth in section 247(b)(2) and in 
this paragraph.